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Avatar for J&J Connections Junk Removal & Clean
J&J Connections Junk Removal & Clean
New to Angi

Serving Walker, CA and surrounding areas

Free estimates

Small jobs welcome

Offers commercial services

At J&J Connections, we help homeowners and businesses reclaim their space quickly, safely, and stress-free.\n\nWe specialize in fast and reliable junk removal, including furniture, appliances, yard debris, garage cleanouts, construction debris, and more. Whether it’s a single item or a full property cleanout, no job is too big or too small.\n\nBut we don’t stop there.\n\nWe also offer:\n• House cleaning services – move-in/move-out cleaning, deep cleaning, and property refreshes\n• Material & item delivery services – transporting materials, furniture, and bulk items from Point A to Point B\n\nWhat sets us apart?\n✔ Local and dependable\n✔ Transparent pricing\n✔ Quick response times\n✔ Respectful, professional service\n✔ We leave your space cleaner than we found it\n\nOur goal isn’t just to remove junk. It’s to provide real value by helping our community stay clean, organized, and stress-free.\n\nMessage us today and let’s get your project handled the right way.

Excavating questions, answered by experts

Concrete blocks are the cheapest way to base a shed. However, the space in between allows critters to go under, burrow, and even damage your shed’s frame. For a more pest-proof option, consider building a shed base with gravel or paver stones. Both options are fairly affordable and easy enough for a DIY project. For gravel, you can build a wooden frame to contain the loose material.

The digging depth will depend on the size of the trencher you use. Even smaller units can dig up to 4 feet deep, which is plenty for a DIY job. However, much larger trenchers can reach a depth of 18 feet and are better used by a team of pro contractors, not a single DIYer. As with all home improvement projects, use the right tool for the job and proceed with caution.

Landscape edging is more DIYable than trenching. You can DIY your own digging projects, but proceed carefully and only with proper knowledge of the equipment and appropriate safety measures in place. Keep in mind the project's scope and estimate how long it will take you to do it on your own. While you can certainly save money by DIYing home improvement projects, you can’t exactly hide an unfinished—or worse, ruined— landscaping job from the neighbors. It’s always safer to call an excavation pro near you to get an estimate.

A joint utility trench, or joint trench, is a long, buried ditch on a property that contains two or more utility lines rather than running the lines in multiple trenches. Some utilities, like gas and electric or electric and communication lines, are better suited to joint trenching, while others, like water and sewer, are not allowed to be in the same trench.

Yes. A metal detector is one of the quickest and easiest ways to find your septic tank. However, metal detectors can be too expensive (costing upward of $300 in some cases), and not everyone has a metal detector just lying around. If that’s the case for you, you can also take a long metal rod and poke it into the ground at regular intervals until you hit something—likely your septic tank lid.

The Walker, CA homeowners’ guide to excavation services

From average costs to expert advice, get all the answers you need to get your job done.